Long-range ballistic transport of Brown-Zak fermions in graphene superlattices.
Julien BarrierPiranavan KumaravadivelRoshan Krishna KumarL A PonomarenkoNa XinMatthew HolwillCiaran MullanMinsoo KimRoman V GorbachevMichael D ThompsonJonathan R PranceTakashi TaniguchiKenji WatanabeIrina V GrigorievaK S NovoselovArtem MishchenkoVladimir I Fal'koAndre K GeimAlexey I BerdyuginPublished in: Nature communications (2020)
In quantizing magnetic fields, graphene superlattices exhibit a complex fractal spectrum often referred to as the Hofstadter butterfly. It can be viewed as a collection of Landau levels that arise from quantization of Brown-Zak minibands recurring at rational (p/q) fractions of the magnetic flux quantum per superlattice unit cell. Here we show that, in graphene-on-boron-nitride superlattices, Brown-Zak fermions can exhibit mobilities above 106 cm2 V-1 s-1 and the mean free path exceeding several micrometers. The exceptional quality of our devices allows us to show that Brown-Zak minibands are 4q times degenerate and all the degeneracies (spin, valley and mini-valley) can be lifted by exchange interactions below 1 K. We also found negative bend resistance at 1/q fractions for electrical probes placed as far as several micrometers apart. The latter observation highlights the fact that Brown-Zak fermions are Bloch quasiparticles propagating in high fields along straight trajectories, just like electrons in zero field.